A new analysis has revealed that African-Americans, Hispanics, and the American Indian/Alaskan Native ethnic populations in the US are significantly more likely to be hospitalized due to COVID-19 than whites.
The analysis from the University of Minnesota, published on Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine, found significant disparities among racial and ethnic groups after reviewing nearly 49,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations over a two-month period in 12 states, reports Xinhua news agency.
“The unique clinical, financial and social impacts of COVID-19 on racial and ethnic populations that are often systematically marginalized in our society must be well understood in order to design and establish effective and equitable infrastructure solutions,” said Pinar Karaca-Mandic, professor and academic director of the Medical Industry Leadership Institute in the University of Minnesota Carlson School, and the study’s lead author.
The study found that the African-Americans were hospitalized at higher rates than those who were white in all 12 states reporting data, with Ohio, Minnesota, and Indiana having the largest disparities.
The Hispanics were hospitalized at higher rates than those who were white in 10 of the 11 states reporting this data, with Virginia, Utah, and Rhode Island with the largest disparities, according to the study.
The American Indian/Alaskan Natives were hospitalized at higher rates than whites in the eight states reporting data.
Researchers note the disparities found in other population groups are largely reversed among Asian communities.
In six of the 10 states that reported data for the Asian group, the proportion of hospitalizations was lower relative to their population representation.
In Massachusetts, individuals who identify as Asian comprise 7 percent of the population but only 4 percent of the coronavirus hospitalizations, according to the study.